Yahoo – AFP,
August 4, 2016
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| Inflation in The Netherlands has dipped into negative territory for the first time in nearly three decades, slipping to -0.30% in July 2016 (AFP Photo/Martti Kainulainen) |
The Hague
(AFP) - Inflation in The Netherlands dipped into negative territory in July for
the first time in nearly three decades, slipping to -0.30 percent, according to
official statistics published on Thursday.
"The
last time that inflation was below zero was in December 1987," the Central
Statistics Office said.
The news
came after three months of stagnation when the country's inflation rate had
remained unchanged at zero percent in April, May and June.
The
negative inflation rate means that last month "for the first time since
December 1987 goods and services were cheaper for consumers" than in the
same period a year earlier, the CBS said.
Weakening
oil prices and the falling cost of holidays helped push the rate down, aided by
lower prices for clothing in the July sales, the office said.
Discounting
the fluctuating energy and food costs, as well as sales of alcohol and tobacco
which are taxed, the inflation rate for July stood at 0.3 percent.
But the CBS
cautioned that negative inflation was not the same as deflation.
The lowest
ever recorded inflation rate in The Netherlands was in January 1987 when the
consumer price index sank to -1.13 percent.
CBS said
the country's inflation rate was now one of the lowest in the eurozone.
The
European Central Bank last month refrained from adding more monetary stimulus to
boost consumer prices in the eurozone, disappointing markets.
Slow
eurozone growth has seen inflation slide in and out of negative territory,
threatening a dangerous downward spiral of falling prices and wages.
The ECB
aims to get inflation back to its long-term target of just below two percent, a
level it deems healthy for growth.

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